The administrative sharing has been changed. This post may help,
Vista issues By default, Vista administrative shares e.g. C$, D$) are
not shared by default for security reasons. You should create your own
shares to share your drives ...
http;//
www.chicagotech.net/vista/vistanetissues.htm
Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE
Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on
http://www.ChicagoTech.net
How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on
http://www.HowToNetworking.com
Actually, the admin shares are there, but by default Windows Vista
prevents local administrators from using their administrator powers over
the network. This results in the inability to remotely administer a
computer using filesharing and tools that use similar technology (such
as the computer manager MMC snap-in and the
administrative shares, such as C$). However, this DOES NOT affect Remote
Desktop in any way. Also, domain-level admins are not affected.
For example: you have an admin account set up on VISTAMACHINE, and log
in to VISTAMACHINE from your other computer XPMACHINE via the network
(net use or whatnot), and try to access VISTAMACHINE's administrative
share C$. Technically you have access to that share; however, due to the
token filtering, you are returned access denied, since the system is
ignoring the fact that you are an administrator.
Although it's probably better to explicitly set up new shares with the
desired security restrictions, you can allow administrators local to a
computer to use their administrator powers when accessing the Vista
computer remotely by following these steps:
- Click start
- Type: regedit
- Press enter
- In the left, browse to the following folder:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\system\
- Right-click a blank area in the right pane
- Click New
- Click DWORD Value
- Type: LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy
- Double-click the item you just created
- Type 1 into the box
- Click OK
- Restart your computer
Regards,
Dave